Funnily enough...science revels in unscientific conclusions in many (most?) situations. Spontaneous remission, placebo, random gene variation, Emergence...and many others are examples. Anything that is not known is put in the category of chance and accident and randomness....though it is clear that the world is anything but random.
Well, current prevailing ideas at the quantum level, certainly, is randomness, though I have my own doubts about that, too. How are those scientific 'conclusions' wrong - they aren't claiming to know a mechanism, but they are undeniably observed phenomena. Should science pretend that it has an explanation and compromise the integrity of the claims it does make?
Fine.... religious mythology and 'God did it' are not suitable explanations....I agree.
But there are alternative possibilities such as biofield
But biofields are in the same basket as 'God did it' - people claim it, but there's no reliable evidence to support it, no suggestion of a mechanism by which it would work that we could test, and no phenomena that would support the idea that it actually exists in the first place.
consciousness/intelligence being integral to nature etc.
That rather depends what you mean by the expression. If you mean consciousness emerges from some natural activities, well yes, but how does that affect tumours, and how would you go about demonstrating or measuring that any more precisely than the current medical demonstrations that people with a 'positive' attitude tend to recover slightly (only slightly) more often or to a greater degree than people with a 'negative' attitude?
that common folk are able to discern....but which are lumped with religious mythology and treated as 'supernatural explanations'and thrown out ....by the intellectual and rational brigade.
And for the same reasons - not because (necessarily) they are definitively wrong, but either because they have been tested and been shown not to be consistent or present at all, or because they are claimed to be unreliable by nature and are therefore untestable.
Scientists should be able to separate religion from those phenomena that are subtle and not obvious to our normal senses and instruments.
They generally are. The things you are suggesting aren't demonstrated phenomena, they are suppositions suggested as mechanics for observable phenomena - we can't detect 'biofields', they are posited as an explanation for illness and healing which we can detect.
These should be investigated with suitable methods that respect the subtlety of the phenomenon......instead of applying the same old methods and techniques again and again and concluding that 'there is nothing there!'. A case of looking at the cosmos with a microscope and concluding that 'there is nothing there'.
When someone can suggest a reliable method for testing these ideas, typically, they are tested, and when they are demonstrated to be undetectable from background chance they are discarded as unproven. There is no 'conspiracy' here - the scientist that can demonstrate biofields will be a shoe in for a Nobel Prize, there's no sensible reason why a scientific researcher would not be working on this if there were a means by which it could be demonstrated.
Some people are of course, trying to bridge the gap with... 'Participatory Anthropic Principle', ' Gaia hypothesis', 'Copenhagen Interpretation of QM', 'many worlds theory', 'consciousness in plants' and such others.
Those are a mixed bag - specific predictions from things like multiple universes (a variant of the 'many worlds theory') can be made and in theory tested at some point. Likewise the Copenhagen interpretation has implications which have been tested and shown not to be the case, which means at the least it needs a reworking. The Gaia hypothesis and consciousness in plants are making claims that aren't, to current understanding, testable even in principle, unless and until we make advances in the understanding of the nature of consciousness: they therefore remain conjecture, and science doesn't base understanding on conjecture.
There is also growing evidence that the world is not as it appears through such phenomena as NDE's, ESP, spontaneous cures .....but there is no changing the mind of the mainstream folks. Its always the same old stuffing a square peg into round hole and yelling 'it doesn't fit' and the perennial 'suitable evidence' demand!
NDE's are perfectly well explained by conventional science without recourse to claims of afterlives and travelling soul/spirit bodies. ESP has been repeatedly and thoroughly tested and has never been shown to be reliable. Spontaneous cures happen, no-one's denying that - the phrase just means that we don't know what causes them, and that's being honest, not pretending like we know something.
This is not 'stuffing a square peg into a round hole', it's having thousands of differently sized round holes and no evidence of any square holes anywhere ever, and you claiming that you've got a square peg that will fit perfectly, except you can't show anyone because it's 'special'.
I have hope though. I expect the situation will change in coming generations!
I have virtually no doubt that, at some point in the future, we will learn something that will show a degree of validity to one or two ideas that are currently seen as somewhere on the 'conjecture/pseudoscience/nonsense' spectrum, but not all of them, and not to the degree that they are claimed by adherents today.
O.